As a singer of the rock band The Frames, Glen Hansard was highly regarded in the indie scene. In the meantime, he performed in the classic movie ‘The Commitments’ as the band’s guitarist. Then he was awarded an Oscar® for the film music for ‘Once’ with his then partner Marketa Irglová as The Swell Season and was suddenly famous. The former street musician with his modest beginnings was overwhelmed by all of this excitement. For two years, he hid out in the anonymity of New York before going back to his roots. Hansard was once called the ‘most Irish of all Irish singers’, by ‘Rolling Stone’. He is also an outspoken disciple of Van Morrison. Hansard came back home and released his first solo album last year: ‘Rhythm And Response’ is the work of a profound poet, who knows what he wants and what not.
Heather Nova Solo plays Baloise Session
Heather Nova was raised on a sailboat, where she spent years sailing the Atlantic with her parents. She would sit at the bow of the ship and contemplate the endless sea and the freedom of the birds while she sang and played her guitar. This enrapture continues to influence her poetic songs which seem as fragile as the delicate singer herself. When she sings of longing in her elven voice with her feet planted on solid ground, she does not sing of the sea, and yet, somehow, she is always in the middle of the sea. Fittingly, her 2011 album was called ‘300 Days At Sea’. It is about the Bermudas, where she was born and where she has been living again after years of commuting between Los Angeles, New York and London.
Randy Crawford and Leon Bisquera play Baloise Session
Besides Ella Fitzgerald, Nina Simone, Aretha Franklin and Dee Dee Bridgewater American jazz and R&B singer Randy Crawford belongs to the most successful female jazz and soul singers. She led R&B veterans the Crusaders on the mega-hit ‘Street Life’ (1979), which was featured in the soundtrack for the films Sharky’s Machine and Jackie Brown. She has sung with Bootsy Collins, Johnny Bristol, Quincy Jones, Al Jarreau, Rick Springfield, Steve Hackett, and Joe Sample amongst others.
Incognito play Baloise Session
The collective ‘Incognito’ has been existing for about thirty years. Almost 1000 musicians have played in his band since then as bandleader Paul ‘Bluey’ Maunick proudly explains. The most important thing is that Maunick told each one of these 1000 musicians exactly what he has to do. No one would imagine that this discreet gentleman with the guitar is the boss behind the scenes. The people up front seem to be calling the shots, the singers and the lead male vocalist, the extremely precise horn players and the rhythm machine, that mercilessly nails every beat. In the nineties in London, it was named acid jazz: jazz harmonies over funk beats that get your toes tapping.
Nick Lowe plays Avo Session
A pivotal figure in UK pub rock, punk rock and new wave, Lowe has recorded a string of well-reviewed solo albums. He is best known for his songs “Cruel to Be Kind” (a US Top 40 single), and “I Love the Sound of Breaking Glass” (a top 10 UK hit), as well as his production work with Elvis Costello, Graham Parker and others. Lowe also wrote “(What’s So Funny ‘Bout) Peace, Love, and Understanding”, a hit for Costello. Nick Lowe rocked English pubs in the 70s, then produced punk greats like the Pretenders and finally found the blues by way of the country band Little Village. Nick explores the dichotomies in the classic blues motifs: fear of God, pact with the devil, domesticity and wanderlust and partying on a Saturday night before the Sunday morning church service.
The Steve Miller Band plays Avo Session
Steve Miller’s parents taught him to love jazz, his friends were hippies and he liked rock. And he wanted to bring all of that together, so he skipped his final literature exams to become a professional musician. In 1967, at the tender age of 24, Steve founded the Steve Miller Band, where he fusioned the blues, psychedelic music and rock with reverb and echo effects to pioneer a new music form that music critics labelled blues rock. Six years later, after making Texas his new home, the guitar hero put his blues sentiment in a nutshell: «Some people call me the space cowboy, some call me the gangster of love». He called the track «The Joker». He’s been filling stadiums in America ever since and he rarely finds the time to come to Europe. It’s great that Steve Miller is finally «headed down» to Switzerland and to the AVO SESSION Basel.
Nick Lowe and Mavis Staples play Avo Session
Mavis Staples and Nick Lowe join forces to define the dichotomy that blues musicians mean when they sing «Standing At The Crossroads» – and the two could not contrast more as a duo. Mavis is an established American gospel singer. Englishman Nick performed in pubs and was as a punk rocker before he discovered country music. They are united by their love for the blues.
Madredeus play Avo Session
Since 1986, Madredeus have spearheaded the long tradition of fado and a woman’s voice was always at the centre, now it is the voice of Beatrix Nunes. The mastermind of the band, guitarist Pedro Ayres Magalhães, helps to ensure the future of fado with his compositions, which are not museum pieces, but rather a reflection of the realities of Lisbon in 2012. They perform some classic works as well as new songs at AVO SESSION.
Nubya plays Avo Session
With her new album «Today», the young Basel soul singer Nubya takes a daring solo departure and has truly come into her own and won over the hearts of her fans. With her beautifully arranged songs, all written by the artist herself, she is a powerhouse.
Stefanie Heinzmann plays Avo Session
The 22-year-old singer Stefanie Heinzmann stormed onto the scene and won over our hearts four years ago with her loud mouth and bubbly personality. In the meantime, the teenager with the formidable voice has become a performer with depth who is taken very seriously. This powerful singer fearlessly explores the boundaries of soulful pop. On her current album, named grippingly simply after her, she demonstrates once again that her music and her personality are still just as upbeat as ever as she sings about dealing with Facebook and Angry Birds and about music that goes deeper than Lady Gaga. She gives impressive proof of her talent at AVO SESSION Basel.